Anonymous wrote:Kwanzaa was started by Ron Karenga, a member of a black nationalist group. He was sentenced to prison for torturing a female member of the group. The religion celebrates the Seven Principles of Blackness, so it would be really pretty hilarious if a white person were to celebrate it.
Anonymous wrote:So does anyone actually celebrate Kwanzaa? Is it the only holiday you celebrate or do you celebrate Christmas and/or Hanukkah also?
I admit that I pretty much wrote it off as a rip-off of Hanukkah but then I had to actually read up on it because my child learned about it at school and it does kind of have an appeal to it.
Anonymous wrote:We do Festivus--for the rest of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:On one episode of her Food Network show, Sandra Lee made a Kwanzaa cake by filling the hole in a bundt cake with corn nuts and apple pie filling, icing it with premade chocolate frosting, and decorating it with seven full sized taper candles.
Hi-larious!
That woman is hilarious.
Anonymous wrote:On one episode of her Food Network show, Sandra Lee made a Kwanzaa cake by filling the hole in a bundt cake with corn nuts and apple pie filling, icing it with premade chocolate frosting, and decorating it with seven full sized taper candles.
Hi-larious!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
And to answer OP, yes, someone actually celebrates Kwanzaa. There are all sorts of different people out there in the world doing and celebrating things that are not familiar with the majority. If you are genuinely interested in Kwanzaa, then this is probably a good place to start. http://www.officialkwanzaawebsite.org/index.shtml
Yes, but I think the OP was asking if anyone on the board celebrates it -- and how they celebrate it. I wonder this too. They celebrate it at my daughter's daycare, but I'd love to hear from a family that celebrates it. (And no, checking wikipedia is not the same thing as hearing from an individual in this case.)